| What We Do / Research and Publications / China Rights Forum / 2004: Gray Zones - Tiananmen - Labor Rights - Children / CRF 2004, No.4 - Growing Up in China |
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CRF 2004, No.4 - Growing Up in China
Fate and Choice In the House of Oppression Regular Features![[CRF No.4, 2004 cover]](http://www.hrichina.org/public/resources/CRF-covers/CRF-2004-4_cover.gif)
Yongyi Song explores how a political movement born on China's campuses nearly 40 years ago continues to make its influence felt in today's Chinese society.
Song Xiaoying describes the experience of growing up as a "class enemy" in the 1960s and 1970s.
An anonymous essayist offers satirical speculation over the fates of certain famous scientists if they
had been born in China.
An Internet poster describes ten professions avoided by China's graduates.
Zheng Yichun and Wang Shaoyan present different perspectives on the factors that may have helped
turn a promising university student into a murderer.
Zeng Renquan learns more than he wants to know about underage prostitution from a man out
rounding up country girls for the trade.
Zhang Youjie reports on the observations of a former government lawyer, Yu Meisun, who witnessed the
importance of family bonds to prisoners.
Statistics and official policies regarding juvenile crime in China.
Gao Ertai, a dissident artist and writer,offers a tribute to the persevering spirit of his daughter, Gao Lin.
Si-si Liu examines China's attempts to address the effects of its coercive one-child policy.
Dissident Zhang Lin reflects on his efforts to build a family under China's oppressive political and
social conditions.
(Translation from Zhang Lin's longer Chinese essay)
Jin Yanming, the wife of imprisoned dissident Liu Jingsheng, describes her triumph against adversity
in raising her son after Liu's arrest in 1992.
Zeng Linlin recalls her childhood experience of being forced to denounce her own mother, the Cultural
Revolutionary dissident Zhang Zhixing.
Eight-year-old Nian Hu describes her hopes as a child of exile.
Ann Noonan reports on fears that the long arm of religious oppression has extended to New York's Chinese Catholics.
Charting a Morally Just Course for China
Baopu Liu reviews Bruce Gilley's China's Democratic Future: How It Will Happen and Where It Will Lead.
A Record for Every Victim
Hu Ping reviews Wang Youqin's Victims of the Cultural Revolution: An Investigative Account of Persecution, Imprisonment and Murder.
Sufei's "Choice"
Stacy Mosher reviews the Laogai Foundation's Better Ten Graves than One Extra Birth.
A Balm in Henan
Tsoi Wing-mui reviews Yuan Zhiming's documentary The Cross: Jesus in China.
Children caught up in religious repression in China
Hu Shigen
What you can do about the issues discussed.
HRIC's activities in August through October 2004
An HRIC Briefing examines issues affecting workers that make the vast majority of the toys that
consumers will purchase this holiday season.
